My directly preceding post notwithstanding, I have to say that the average X-ray does not produce 1.5 Gy (it's actually a lot less).
An antero-posterior skull X-ray produces about 0.03 mSv (millisieverts), or 0.00003 Gy. So by that measure, 12 Gy delivers 400,000 times the amount of radiation of an AP skull X-ray. However (and this is a huge qualifying factor), the volume of an irradiated tumor is a tiny, tiny fraction of that for an entire skull -- especially if the tumor is small- or medium-size. The difference between doses for X-ray and GK are probably more in the range of hundreds-of-X-rays equivalence for GK. Again, the link in my immediately preceding post gives more info on why the size of the treated area matters so much. (Kudos to PaulW and Marianna for pointing that out in that particular thread.)
To put this in a different perspective, if a person were to receive 200,000 AP skull X-rays at once (not that that's even possible), they would be dead within 14 days afterwards. GK delivers twice that amount of radiation, yet virtually nobody ever dies from GK (unless it's performed radically irresponsibly). That's because the high dose given is applied only to a very small area conforming to the location of the tumor.
Best wishes to all,
TW